Originally posted by David Orsam
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Pawn tickets in Mitre Square
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[QUOTE=Elamarna;390574]
Pierre
There appears to be an inconsistency here compared to your previous messages.
When asked if the alleged communication in the mustard tin contained any information or message? YOU told me no just the full name, nothing else.
That is not biographical information is it?
It appears you so often forget what you have said in previous posts.
Steve
We seem to have different definitions of biographical information. What I mean is personal data.
And no, I do not "forget" (and that is not important).
Pierre
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Originally posted by Pierre View PostBecause there is not a set of historical sources for Samuel Miller which shows that he was the killer. You need sources 1) from his life that can 2) explain the Whitechapel murders. It is not enough to postulate that his name is in a source and that his wife´s name is in the same source. You must be able to 3) connect that to his own life and to events in his own life. There must even be 4) indications on a micro level that he was the killer. And 5) you must be able to explain why the sources are what they are from his perspective. There must even be 6) dates in his own life explaining the dates of the murders and the communication, and you must 7) have sources that show that he was there. You must also 8) have sources that show why the murders started, 9) ended, 10) started again and 11) ended again. And last but not least you must 12) have a confession.
Do you have all this and can you connect it to Samuel Miller?
It's a good example of where you are going wrong in all your threads. You seem to think that because you have evidence against a suspect that all these weird messages that you think you find in strange places have meaning and are significant. But you can find weird messages about almost anyone in almost anything if you look hard enough. And that's the problem. Your unsupported certainty as to the killer's identity, combined with your unuspported certainty that the killer left messages for the police, is causing you to imagine things which are not there in reality.
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Originally posted by Pierre View PostYou have the same problem with the message from Rader. You get lots of names "hidden" in it.
And it was still sent by the killer.
So even if the pawn tickets do contain a message (which is so unlikely that it can be ignored) the name that you think you have found in the pawn tickets could easily be the wrong one couldn't it?
And that is the case even if there are other "sources" to support your argument about your suspect because it could no more than a coincidence couldn't it?
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Originally posted by Pierre View PostThat is easy to answer. If you go through the sources, you will find that there was communication.
Pierre I regret to say that I do not believe you for one second that any such sources exist or possibly can exist.
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Originally posted by Pierre View PostNo, it is you who thinks that criminal activity is not a sensible motive.
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Originally posted by Pierre View Post
Of course you can compare them. It is easy.
The message from Rader was to the press, the mustard tin was found at the murder site.
The message from Rader contained a lot of redundant letters. The mustard tin contained very few redundant letters.
The message from Rader contained biographical information. The mustard tin contained biographical information.
The message from Rader gave the police and others a chance to identify the killer. The content in the mustard tin gave the police and others a chance to identify the killer.
Firstly the message from Rader was an actual and obvious message. It was clear to the press and to everyone that it must contain a message from the killer. The pawn tickets on the other hand looked like pawn tickets - not a message - and no-one - not a single person - even suspected that they would contain any form of message from the killer so that no-one looked for one.
Secondly, the point about redundant letters is moot because you can see that the puzzle contains actual words hidden within what appears at first glance to be a random sequence of letters. It doesn't involve selecting certain letters at random and rearranging them.
Thirdly, I have to echo what Steve has said. A name is not "biographical information".
Fourthly, re. "The content in the mustard tin gave the police and others a chance to identify the killer", what a lot of nonsense! The content in the mustard tin gave the police and others no chance whatsoever to identify the killer. It's literally impossible. There are probably thousands of names which can be extracted from the 42 characters in the pawn tickets and you've been given plenty. What's the point of a puzzle which is impossible to solve?
In short, Pierre, there is no comparison whatsoever between the Rader puzzle and the pawn tickets, not to mention that there is testimony that the pawn tickets were in Eddowes' possession before she was murdered. It's all madness.
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Originally posted by Pierre View Post
The message from Rader contained biographical information. The mustard tin contained biographical information.
There appears to be an inconsistency here compared to your previous messages.
When asked if the alleged communication in the mustard tin contained any information or message? YOU told me no just the full name, nothing else.
That is not biographical information is it?
It appears you so often forget what you have said in previous posts.
Steve
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[QUOTE=David Orsam;390564]I already commented on this in the Sweet Violets thread yesterday Pierre. I said:
"There is absolutely no comparison between an obviously coded message provided by a killer to the police/media and the pawn tickets found next to Eddowes' body for which there was actual sworn testimony that they were in the possession of Eddowes before she was murdered".
The message from Rader was to the press, the mustard tin was found at the murder site.
The message from Rader contained a lot of redundant letters. The mustard tin contained very few redundant letters.
The message from Rader contained biographical information. The mustard tin contained biographical information.
The message from Rader gave the police and others a chance to identify the killer. The content in the mustard tin gave the police and others a chance to identify the killer.
I appreciate that you are utterly obsessed with the notion that Jack the Ripper attempted some form of communication with the authorities but how you can compare two normal pawn tickets (for which there is no reason at all to think they are in code or in any form of "anagram type" puzzle) with an actual word puzzle is beyond me. To even think that the pawn tickets comprise a word puzzle you have to try and discredit the inquest evidence of John Kelly for which you have yet to come up with any kind of sensible motive as to why he would have lied.
And even if (which is too ridiculous to contemplate) the pawn tickets were magically planted by the killer in the form of a puzzle, you have failed to provide a convincing explanation as to why YOU have found the solution.
There are, as we have seen, lots of names "hidden" in the words on the pawn tickets so why is the name that you have identified any better than anyone else's?
And it was still sent by the killer.
Furthermore, out of Jane Kelly, Emily Birrell, White's Row and Dorset Street I can extract the phrases "Miller is the killer" (and even S. Miller is the killer) and "Miller done it" and plenty more if I put my mind to it. The phrase "Samuel Miller is the killer" can also be found (in that order) in the lyrics to "Sweet Violets". So (bearing in mind that MJK was murdered in Miller's Court) do the pawn tickets and the lyrics to "Sweet Violets" in combination point to Samuel Miller, whose wife's name was Zillah, as the killer? If not, why not?
Do you have all this and can you connect it to Samuel Miller?Last edited by Pierre; 08-18-2016, 09:49 AM.
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I already commented on this in the Sweet Violets thread yesterday Pierre. I said:
"There is absolutely no comparison between an obviously coded message provided by a killer to the police/media and the pawn tickets found next to Eddowes' body for which there was actual sworn testimony that they were in the possession of Eddowes before she was murdered".
I appreciate that you are utterly obsessed with the notion that Jack the Ripper attempted some form of communication with the authorities but how you can compare two normal pawn tickets (for which there is no reason at all to think they are in code or in any form of "anagram type" puzzle) with an actual word puzzle is beyond me. To even think that the pawn tickets comprise a word puzzle you have to try and discredit the inquest evidence of John Kelly for which you have yet to come up with any kind of sensible motive as to why he would have lied.
And even if (which is too ridiculous to contemplate) the pawn tickets were magically planted by the killer in the form of a puzzle, you have failed to provide a convincing explanation as to why YOU have found the solution. There are, as we have seen, lots of names "hidden" in the words on the pawn tickets so why is the name that you have identified any better than anyone else's?
Furthermore, out of Jane Kelly, Emily Birrell, White's Row and Dorset Street I can extract the phrases "Miller is the killer" (and even S. Miller is the killer) and "Miller done it" and plenty more if I put my mind to it. The phrase "Samuel Miller is the killer" can also be found (in that order) in the lyrics to "Sweet Violets". So (bearing in mind that MJK was murdered in Miller's Court) do the pawn tickets and the lyrics to "Sweet Violets" in combination point to Samuel Miller, whose wife's name was Zillah, as the killer? If not, why not?
Pierre I can understand anyone who thinks this thread is a joke created by you as a laugh because it is simply so absurd. I happen to think that you are being serious, which is extraordinary, but you don't seem to realise how crazy this line of enquiry is.
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[QUOTE=Pierre;390522]
Now, read this word puzzle from the BTK-killer. Compared to this, the mustard tin is a simple little thing.
http://www.tabloidcolumn.com/btk-puzzle.html
You do not need to state the obvious again, i.e. telling us the contents of these different sources, but it would be interesting to hear some more theoretic and analytic comments for once.
One could, for example, start with such questions as:
What do you think about the BTK-killers communication?
What do you think he wanted to achieve?
What could a killer in Mitre Square have wanted to achieve with a communication in a mustard tin?
What are the differences between the two types of communication and what could they imply?
For example, you have a lot more redundant letters in the BTK-communication and there are many more words included in the communication he sent.
I am also very interested in the date of the murders and the communications left at this date as well as in a possible connection to the two sources, the mustard tin and the Goulston Street graffito. I am also very interested in what you think about the possible recipient(s) of these communications.
What are your theoretic and/or analytic opinions about this?Last edited by Pierre; 08-18-2016, 05:34 AM.
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Originally posted by David Orsam View PostYou are wrong actually Pierre. I can do this as much as anyone else if I want to.
In this case, however, I wasn't 'deciding whether or not a serial killer expressed himself through letters and in what form'. I was simply stating a fact based on what you have told us.
Although you initially said in#103 that we were dealing with "An anagram for a complete, full name with all the given names and the surname", it transpires that we are not dealing with an anagram at all because, according to you, not all the letters in the puzzle have been used to create 'the solution'.
That is why I said accurately: "I wouldn't mind, but the 'puzzle' Pierre is telling us the killer left for the police isn't even an anagram!"
Now, read this word puzzle from the BTK-killer. Compared to this, the mustard tin is a simple little thing.
http://www.tabloidcolumn.com/btk-puzzle.html
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Originally posted by Pierre View PostIt is not for you to decide whether or not a serial killer expressed himself through letters and in what form.
In this case, however, I wasn't 'deciding whether or not a serial killer expressed himself through letters and in what form'. I was simply stating a fact based on what you have told us.
Although you initially said in#103 that we were dealing with "An anagram for a complete, full name with all the given names and the surname", it transpires that we are not dealing with an anagram at all because, according to you, not all the letters in the puzzle have been used to create 'the solution'.
That is why I said accurately: "I wouldn't mind, but the 'puzzle' Pierre is telling us the killer left for the police isn't even an anagram!"
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Originally posted by Bridewell View PostI don't know who the killer was but I'm entirely convinced that whoever it was didn't leave his name in anagram form at one of the crime scenes. Pierre, if you're relying on this kind of "evidence" to make a case for your suspect you're going down a well-trodden (and utterly discredited) route.
I am actually not relying on anything. I merely ask questions. Sometimes the sources kick back. I let them.
Hypothesis are preliminary working tools.
They are not the Bible.
Regards, Pierre
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